Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

20070502 Presidential Vetoes from 1789 to present

Presidential Vetoes from 1789 to present

Information from: Office of the Clerk
U. S. House of Representatives
http://clerk.house.gov/art_history/house_history/vetoes.html

Presidential Vetoes

(1789 to Present)

Since 1789, the President has had the authority to veto legislation passed by Congress. This authority is one of the significant tools in the President's legislative dealings with Congress. It is effective in directly preventing the passage of legislation undesirable to the President, and the threat of a veto can bring about changes in the content of legislation long before the bill is ever presented to the President.

There are two types of vetoes available to the President. The "regular veto" is a qualified negative veto, which is limited by the ability of Congress to muster the necessary two-thirds vote of each House for constitutional override. The other type of veto is a "pocket veto." This veto is actually an absolute veto that cannot be overridden; it becomes effective when the President fails to sign a bill after Congress has adjourned and is unable to override the veto.


President Congresses
Regular Vetoes
Pocket Vetoes
Total Vetoes
Vetoes
Overridden
George Washington 1st- 4th
2
.....
2
.....
John Adams 5th-6th
.....
.....
.....
.....
Thomas Jefferson 7th-10th
.....
.....
.....
.....
James Madison 11th-14th
5
2
7
.....
James Monroe 15th-18th
1
.....
1
.....
John Quincy Adams 19th-20th
.....
.....
.....
.....
Andrew Jackson 21st-24th
5
7
12
.....
Martin Van Buren 25th-26th
.....
1
1
.....
William Henry Harrison 27th
.....
.....
.....
.....
John Tyler 27th-28th
6
4
10
1
James K. Polk 29th-30th
2
1
3
.....
Zachary Taylor 31st
.....
.....
.....
.....
Millard Fillmore 31st-32nd
.....
.....
.....
.....
Franklin Pierce 33rd-34th
9
.....
9
5
James Buchanan 35th-36th
4
3
7
.....
Abraham Lincoln 37th-39th
2
5
7
.....
Andrew Johnson 39th-40th
21
8
29
15
Ulysses S. Grant 41st-44th
45
48
93
4
Rutherford B. Hayes 45th-46th
12
1
13
1
James A. Garfield 47th
.....
.....
.....
.....
Chester A. Arthur 47th-48th
4
8
12
1
Grover Cleveland 49th-50th
304
110
414
2
Benjamin Harrison 51st-52nd
19
25
44
1
Grover Cleveland 53rd-54th
42
128
170
5
William McKinley 55th-57th
6
36
42
.....
Theodore Roosevelt 57th-60th
42
40
82
1
William H. Taft 61st-62nd
30
9
39
1
Woodrow Wilson 63rd-66th
33
11
44
6
Warren G. Harding 67th
5
1
6
.....
Calvin Coolidge 68th-70th
20
30
50
4
Herbert C. Hoover 71st-72nd
21
16
37
3
Franklin D. Roosevelt 73rd-79th
372
263
635
9
Harry S. Truman 79th-82nd
180
70
250
12
Dwight D. Eisenhower 83rd-86th
73
108
181
2
John F. Kennedy 87th-88th
12
9
21
.....
Lyndon B. Johnson 88th-90st
16
14
30
.....
Richard M. Nixon 91st-93rd
26
17
43
7
Gerald R. Ford 93rd-94th
48
18
66
12
James Earl Carter 95th-96th
13
18
31
2
Ronald Reagan 97th-100th
39
39
78
9
George Bush* 101th-102nd
29
15
44
1
William J. Clinton 103rd-106th
36
1
37
2
George W. Bush 107th-110th
2
.....
2
.....
Total
............
1486
1066
2552
106

* President Bush attempted to pocket veto two bills during intrasession recess periods. Congress considered the two bills enacted into law because of the President's failure to return the legislation. The bills are not counted as pocket vetoes in this table.

Source: Congressional Research Service

20070430 Fire destroys barn on historic Whittaker Chambers farm










Fire destroys barn on historic Whittaker Chambers “Pumpkin Papers” farm

Monday evening, April 30, 2007 approximately 35 fire fighters from Carroll County, Maryland and Adams County, Pennsylvania responded to a fire which destroyed a barn that was over 150 years-old on the Whittaker Chambers’ “Pipe Creek Farm” (the old Thomas Farm) just north of Westminster, Maryland.

April 30th, 2007 Kevin Dayhoff http://www.kevindayhoff.net/

References:

My Tentacle column for Wednesday, May 1st, 2007 is on the “The Legacy of Whittaker Chambers:”

On Monday evening, a tragic fire destroyed a circa-1850 barn on the historic Whittaker Chambers "Pumpkin Patch" farm just north or Westminster in Carroll County.

Interestingly enough, most of those attending the fire were not aware of the significance of the farm, which made history in 1948.

More than 45 years after his death on July 9, 1961, Whittaker Chambers continues to have a profound impact on the conservative movement in the United States.

Mr. Chambers was an accomplished writer and editor, who had been a member of the Communist Party of the United States from 1925 to 1937. He renounced communism in 1937.

After he defected from the Communist Party and abandoned his role as a Soviet spy, he became a courageous and vocal critic of communism and acquired lasting fame for outing Alger Hiss "as a fellow member of his underground Communist cell in the 1930s," according to Dr. Lee Edwards.

Dr. Edwards, writing for the Heritage Foundation in April 2001, called Mr. Hiss "a golden boy of the liberal establishment."

[…]

The site of the “Pumpkin Papers” has, over the years, come to be considered a national treasure by conservatives as many consider Whittaker Chambers to be a true American patriot of the first order.

[…]

In recent months, the “Union Mills Reservoir” project, first suggested by the City of Westminster in the mid-1970s has been revived by the Carroll County Commissioners. Unfounded concerns immediately surfaced that the much-needed water project has threatened the site of the “Pumpkin Papers,” and the Chambers’ “Pipe Creek Farm,” that was granted “national landmark status” in 1988 by Interior Secretary Donald P. Hodel.

Fortunately, I have been led to a clear understanding that the Carroll County Commissioners share the view of many that everything possible needs to be done to preserve the “Pumpkin Papers” site yet nevertheless, take care of the commissioners’ basic “health, safety, and welfare” responsibilities to greater Carroll County.

Read the rest of my Tentacle column here: “The Legacy of Whittaker Chambers.”

Penny Riordan, writing for the Carroll County Times also wrote about the fire:

Fire causes damage at historic farm A late afternoon fire burned a barn to the ground and severely damaged a shed at the historic Chambers Farm off Bachmans Valley Road in Westminster Monday. The farm, which is listed as a National Historic Landmark, was where former owner Whittaker Ch…

For other posts on Soundtrack about Whittaker Chambers please click: Chambers – Whittaker Chambers and the “Pumpkin Papers”

_____

Monday evening, April 30, 2007 approximately 35 fire fighters from Carroll County, Maryland and Adams County, Pennsylvania responded to a fire which destroyed a barn that was over 150 years-old on the Whittaker Chambers’ “Pipe Creek Farm” (the old Thomas Farm) just north of Westminster, Maryland.

The call for the fire went out at 4:40 pm and the fire was declared under control by 5:45 pm. (I arrived with the canteen crew at 6:15 and took these pictures of the scene after the fire had been gotten under control.

As I wrote in my Tentacle column which came out this morning, “The Legacy of Whittaker Chambers:” Interesting enough, most folks attending the fire were not aware of the history or the significance of the farm, which made history in 1948.

It was Whittaker Chambers (April 1, 1901 – July 9, 1961) who was called to testify on August 3rd, 1948 in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC.) Mr. Chambers had been a member of the Communist Party of the United States from 1925 to 1937. He renounced communism in 1937.

In several sessions in front of HUAC, he identified Alger Hiss, “a golden boy of the liberal establishment, as a fellow member of his underground Communist cell in the 1930s,” but offered little in the way of corroborating evidence.

Subsequently, Mr. Hiss, who denied he was a communist spy, sued Mr. Chambers for libel on October 8th, 1948. Under pressure to provide materials to support his claims, and in response to a subpoena from HUAC, it was in December 1948 that Mr. Chambers retrieved various materials he had secreted in a hollowed-out pumpkin on his Carroll County farm. The press immediately named them the “Pumpkin Papers.”

Although it was not confirmed, the destroyed barn is believed to be adjacent to the December 1948 pumpkin patch. And a nearby building also heavily damaged, is hypothecated to be the “steer building” where Mr. Chambers and HUAC member Richard Nixon, once met to review the pumpkin patch materials.

______

When I turned in my copy for the Tentacle column, I had to cut it for word limit.

Pasted-in here are a few outtakes, juxtaposed in context:

[…]

Over 45 years after his death on July 9, 1961, Whittaker Chambers continues to have a profound impact upon the conservative movement in the United States.

William F. Buckley Jr., who later became steadfast friends with Whittaker Chambers, called him “the most important American defector from Communism.”

Mr. Chambers was an accomplished writer and editor who had been a member of the Communist Party of the United States from 1925 to 1937. He renounced communism in 1937.

[…]

After he graduated from high school in 1919 he enrolled in Columbia University, where his classmates came to consider him to possess a first rate mind and a gifted writer.

His classmates included the celebrated “Objectivist” poet, Louis Zukofsky; art historian Meyer Schapiro; and author and literary critic, Lionel Trilling, whose 1947 novel about an affluent communist family, “The Middle of the Journey,” is said to have been based on a main character fashioned after Mr. Chambers.

In her 2002 book, “Red Spy Queen: A Biography of Elizabeth Bentley,” historian Kathryn Olmsted referred to Mr. Chambers as being “brilliant, disturbed, idealistic, - and dysfunctional.”

In his first brush with public controversy, he abruptly left Columbia after he wrote “A Play for Puppets” in October 1922, under the pseudonym, “John Kelly,” for “The Morningside,” a college magazine which had been brought back to life by John Erskine in 1920.

The New York press excoriated him as an “enfants terribles,” for being, what was considered at the time, sacrilegious, profane, and blasphemous. (Read today, it would be considered “mildly ribald,” according to July 2006 essay by Tim Woods, “Zukofsky at Columbia” in “Jacket Magazine.”)

It is suggested that Mr. Chambers left Columbia in January 1923 in anticipation of being expelled for his writings in “The Morningside,” a college magazine, which the New York press excoriated as sacrilegious, profane, and blasphemous.

_____

This is the Westminster Fire Department Public Information Officer Report:

At 16:39 (4:39 PM) Carroll County firefighters from Westminster, Pleasant Valley and Reese were dispatched for a barn fire on Saw Mill Road near Bachman’s Valley Road. The first units on the scene found a 40 x 60 barn well involved with smoke visible for several miles. Chief 3-1 arrived on the scene first and assumed command. He immediately requested a tanker task force for water supply. There were exposure problems and access was limited to certain areas around the fire. Water supply was established from a pond on Bachman’s Valley road.

Subsequent units responding in addition to those on the initial alarm were from Taneytown, Manchester, New Windsor, and Littlestown in Adams County, Pennsylvania. There were approximately 35 firefighters from the above department.

The fire was placed under control at 17:45 (5:45 PM) and the tanker task force was released at 18:45. Units stayed on the scene until 20:00 (8 PM) for overhaul.

The barn was over 100 years old and was on the farm known as the Whitaker Chambers Farm. Cause and determination of the fire is under investigation by Maryland State Fire Marshall.

April 30th, 2007 Kevin Dayhoff http://www.kevindayhoff.net/


20070501 Westminster Senior Center to be closed Wednesday

Westminster Senior Center to be closed Wednesday

Carroll County Government News Release

For more information, contact: Vivian D. Laxton, W.A.B,

Public Information Administrator

For Immediate Release

Westminster Senior Center to be closed Wednesday

Construction also shuts down Bureau of Aging offices

May 1, 2007, 7:30 p.m. – Construction is requiring the closure of the Westminster Senior Center and the Carroll County Bureau of Aging offices on Wednesday, May 2.

Both facilities, located at 125 Stoner Avenue, are expected to reopen on time Thursday, May 3.

Seniors who usually eat lunch at the senior center can attend any of the other four senior centers in the county – Taneytown, Greenmount, Mount Airy, and Eldersburg – for their meals.

Residents who need to conduct emergency business with Bureau of Aging staff can call Jolene Sullivan, Director, Department of Citizen Services at 410-386-3600. Regular business will resume Thursday.

# # #

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

20070501 Quote of the day

Quote of the day

The chief danger in life is that you may take too many precautions.” Alfred Adler (1870-1937) Psychiatrist

Thanks TC

20070501 List of Carroll County Volunteer Fire Departments and the Chief of each Department

List of Carroll County Volunteer Fire Departments and the Chief of each Department

Westminster Fire Department

Carroll County emergency response

Carroll County Volunteer Fire Fighter Departments

As of May 1st, 2007

Gamber - Co. 13
Chief: Dennis Brothers
410-795-3445

Hampstead - Co. 2
Chief: Bryan Ruby
410-239-4280

Harney - Co. 11
Chief: Donald Yingling, Sr.
410-756-6464

Lineboro - Co. 7
Chief: Shawn Utz
410-374-2197

Manchester - Co. 4
Chief: Chuck Gouker
410-239-2286

Mount Airy - Co. 1
Chief: Dale Lowman
410-795-8055

New Windsor - Co. 10
Chief: Donald Nott
410-635-6373

Pleasant Valley - Co. 6
Chief: Mike Gist
410-848-1977

Reese - Co. 9
Chief: Don Love
410-848-7172

Sykesville/Freedom - Co. 12
Chief: Glenn E. Ruch Sr.
410-795-8021

Taneytown - Co. 5
Chief: Brett Six
410-756-6253

Union Bridge - Co. 8
Chief: Chad Green
410-775-7422

Westminster - Co. 3
Chief: Jeff Alexander
410-848-1800

Winfield - Co. 14
Chief: Tim Warner
410-795-1333

20070430 Daily Photoblog "The Plumbers"


Daily Photoblog – “The Plumbers” © Kevin Dayhoff

April 30th, 2007

C. E. Abend and Sons, Westminster, Maryland (410) 848-0204

Monday, April 30, 2007

20070430 Wagoner, Stick Capture Westminster Main Street Mil



Wagoner, Stick Capture Westminster Main Street Mile

By Dave Herlocker

April 30th, 2007

For other past posts about the Westminster Annual Main Street Mile on “Soundtrack.”

Photo credit: Westminster Annual Main Street Mile April 18, 2007 Photo by Stan Ruchlewicz

Matthew Wagoner from neighboring Frederick County and Westminster Road Runner member Sherry Stick captured the men's and women's division of the 26th annual Main Street Mile, held on April 18 and sponsored by the Westminster Road Runners.

Because of the large crowds which have participated in recent years in the downhill run from the east ridge of Westminster to the library at the center of town, registration was halted at 700 this year, with approximately 275 being in the first, competitive heat and the remainder in the second heat, treated as an untimed fun run.

Wagoner, a teacher at Linganore High School just over the Frederick-Carroll county line, led the first wave of runners down the initial hill, and by the time he reached the half-mile point in 2:02, the only question was how large his winning margin would be.

Wagoner's winning time of 4:09 is the fastest time of the century, even though it is almost fifteen seconds slower than the course record, set by Todd Ashley in 1988. Trailing Wagoner by thirteen seconds was newly minted masters runner Doug Mock, who in younger days won this race in under four minutes. Considering that he recently suffered numerous injuries in a fall from a fast moving bicycle, his effort is to be commended.

Danny Fink nipped Remus Medley for third, and Nicholas Wilbur, a member of the McDaniel College track team, finished fifth. Finishing tenth was Shawn Pinamonti, winner of the race in 2001 and 2002.

Repeating her 2006 winning effort was Sherry Stick, who spent her college years at Salisbury University on Maryland's Eastern Shore running 800 and 1500 meter runs. Finishing fourteenth overall, Stick's time of 4:50 was one second faster than last year's winning time and also one second faster than her second place time in 2001.

Brittney Rooks, whose 4:57 time is only the second sub-five minute time recorded by a thirteen or under female, finished second, ahead of Becky Alwarez-Rhodes, who finished second last year. Another thirteen year old, Anna Rachel Demaree, finished fourth, one place better than last year, and Ashley Baker, a McDaniel College senior whose tennis season was sidelined by student teaching duties, finished fifth.

While race officials were sorting through finishing times, and finishers from the first heat were attacking ice cream, word was received from the course that a fun runner had collapsed just past the half-way point and was being treated by medics administering CPR.

To the distress of everyone, the runner--six year old Connor Smith, running with his mother and participating in his fourth Main Street Mile--could not be revived.

Doctors at nearby Carroll General Hospital later stated that he suffered from a rare and previously undiagnosed heart condition known as anomalous left coronary.

Ten days later, on a beautiful Saturday morning, a memorial service was held in Odenton, Maryland, at Connor's home church. In a church filled with family and friends and adorned with flowers, toys, and pictures, Connor was lauded as an intelligent and active child, who treasured the medals he received in the Main Street Mile and who had trained prior to the race. His parents have allowed the Westminster Road Runners to post a picture on Connor, wearing his 2006 Main Street Mile shirt, on the club's web site (www.carr.org/~wrrc).

Contributions may be made to the Connor Smith Memorial Fund at the Dayton Oaks Elementary School, 4691 Ten Oaks Road, Dayton, MD, 21036. Monies received will be used to purchase books for the library on subjects that Connor loved.

20070430 April 2007 Maryland Governor O’Malley press releases

April 2007 Maryland Governor O’Malley press releases

Press Releases

http://www.gov.state.md.us/press.asp

April 30th, 2007

April 30 O'Malley, Board of Public Works Set Tax Rate; Hold the Line on Property Taxes

April 30 O'Malley Visits Montgomery County Schools Headquarters; Attends M-Stat Session

April 27 Governor O'Malley Establishes Judicial Nominating Commissions

April 25 O'Malley Tours Bay Monitoring Sites, Studies Restoration Programs

April 24 Governor Martin O’Malley Signs Legislation to Protect Maryland's Environment; Chesapeake Bay

April 20 Governor Martin O’Malley Signs Greenhouse Gas Agreement, Climate Change Executive Order

April 19 Governor Martin O’Malley Announces Funding for Agriculture and Cover Crops

April 18 Governor Martin O’Malley to Tour Maryland

April 18 Governor Martin O’Malley Announces the Preservation of Blackwater Land

April 11 Governor O’Malley Tours Green School in Montgomery County.

April 10 Governor O’Malley Signs Legislation to Make Government Work Again

April 9 Governor O'Malley Congratulates General Assembly on Successful Session

April 3 Governor O’Malley Applauds Creation Of The Maryland Life Sciences Advisory Board

20070430 Quote of the day

Quote of the day: Teach

April 30, 2007

“[The best that the] great teachers can do for us is to help us to discover what is already present in ourselves.” Irving Babbitt (1865-1933) Scholar

Thanks TC

20070429 Daily Photoblog Carroll Co MD Ag Center Tractor Pull


Daily Photoblog

April 29, 2007

Carroll County Maryland Ag Center Tractor Pull

20070429 Carroll Co. FOP Lodge # 20 support for LEOPS for Carroll Co. Sheriff's Department

Carroll County FOP Lodge 20 supports LEOPS for Carroll County Sheriff’s Department

April 29, 2007

{Editors note: For a response to this post please see:
20070518 County Benefit Administrator responds to Sheriff retirement issue}

The letter attached is written by John Shippee, President of the Carroll County Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 20.

The members of this lodge publicly support Sheriff Kenneth Tregoning in his attempt to acquire an industry standard retirement for the deputies of the Carroll County Sheriff's Office.

For further information please contact Carroll County FOP State Trustee Rex Scott at 443-277-2717 or 443-375-6346.

FROM: John Shippee, President, Fraternal Order of Police, Carroll County Lodge # 20.

SUBJECT: Carroll County Sheriff’s Office.

During recent weeks there has been much written concerning the future policing in Carroll County. The recent budget hearings involving the requests from the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) and MSP concerning the resident trooper program has fueled this debate.

What has unfortunately been lost is the actual issue, which is a fair and standard retirement and disability plan for members of Sheriff’s Services, not who will be primary – CCSO or a County Police Force.

The current resident trooper program will be phased out, as indicated in the past by Superintendent Tim Hutchins. To implement a county police force is a matter to be addressed by the Board of Commissioners and the Citizens.

The most sensible and cost effective option is to utilize a resource they have used for the past several years, the CCSO, a full service law enforcement agency, which has obtained accreditation through CALEA. The savings of utilizing the CCSO vs. a County Police force is estimated in the millions of dollars.

However, as stated by Commissioner Gouge, her main concern with using the Sheriff’s Office is that the Commissioners cannot control and appoint a Sheriff, but they can control the Chief of a County Police Force. As a citizen of Carroll, a taxpayer and voter, Commissioner Gouge will have a difficult time selling that idea.

Law Enforcement is a profession based on commitment to the citizens of whom they serve, sacrifice and protect. All police officers, as with our fellow fire fighters and EMTs, are specially trained and continually place themselves in harms way.

Police must undergo a physical agility test, a thorough background investigation, a polygraph examination and a battery of psychological tests. They must master certain objectives and pass requirements of the Maryland Police and Correctional Training Commission. In order to remain a certified police officer they must annually train within requirements set forth by the training commission. In short it is not an average career.

Members of the CCSO have been conducting primary law enforcement duties for the citizens of Carroll County and working hand in hand with all agencies within the county for many years. All of those allied agencies have a law enforcement retirement and disability plan.

Sheriff Tregoning and the men and woman of the CCSO only request what is fair and reasonable from the County Commissioners. An industry standard defined benefit retirement plan, to include a disability and survivor death benefit.

####

####

For previous posts about Law Enforcement Matters see:

Carroll County Sheriff’s Office

Law and Order

LEOPS (Law Enforcement Officers Pension System)

Maryland State Police

Westminster Police Department

Carroll County FOP Lodge # 20


Sunday, April 29, 2007

20070429 Quote of the day: “The principal difference between a dog and a man.”

Quote of the day: “The principal difference between a dog and a man.”

April 29, 2007

“If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man.” Mark Twain

20070427 A costly failure to tackle budget gap

A costly failure to tackle budget gap

By David Brinkley

April 27, 2007

Recently Sen. David Brinkley, a Republican who represents Frederick and Carroll counties, and minority leader of the Maryland Senate wrote an op-ed piece for the Baltimore Sun. In a subsequent phone conversation with Senator Brinkley, he gave me permission to publish his letter on “Soundtrack:”

At the bill-signing ceremony Tuesday, state Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller commented that he was glad to see that the bill to protect the terrapin was on the list to be signed because the slow pace of the turtle symbolized the glacial pace of the O'Malley administration. A red-faced Gov. Martin O'Malley gave thumbs-up and replied, "Fear the turtle?"

Mr. Miller has spoken freely about the lost opportunities of the 2007 session - articulating a position that many legislators agree with but few are willing to speak about.

The new governor requested time from legislative leadership to assess the state's financial situation in preparation for major changes in 2008. Thanks to his predecessor, Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., there was cash reserved for such a luxury. However, spending down the state's cash reserve funds to the statutory bare minimum leaves the state in a worse position for next year's budget deliberations.

The General Assembly's failure to address the state's structural deficit in this year's session portends greater hardships on Maryland's working families when the taxman (or woman) comes in future sessions. Which taxes will the state increase without putting Maryland at a competitive disadvantage?

Regrettably, initiatives to address the state's pending budgetary disaster were rejected even though relatively small measures to reduce spending this year would yield big dividends in the future.

While the administration sought (and received) more time to seek efficiencies, most legislators know that the annual budget process over the last few years has been concentrating on trimming increased spending in most other agencies to fund the historic increase in public education funding recommended by the Thornton Commission.

I support Governor O'Malley's StateStat initiative. I submit, however, that he will find Governor Ehrlich streamlined state operations, and the low-hanging fruits of financial efficiency have already been harvested.

Now the Democrats' rallying cry in Annapolis is that nothing short of major tax increases can possibly fix the dilemma we will confront next year. I disagree, and so do the members of the Republican caucus.

Senate Republicans offered an alternative budget plan this session to retain the state's cash reserves for a true "rainy day" and to trim spending increases this year but maintain high levels of education funding. A video lottery terminal bill passed by the Senate last year could be used as a new funding source that would eliminate the structural deficit over the next five years.

Several senators noted that this plan could solve the state's fiscal challenge without the need to increase taxes. Despite the pronouncement of a newfound cooperation in Annapolis, this measure failed on a party-line vote.

On a positive note, few new state programs were added requiring additional funding in the future. Paradoxically, "progressives" will decry the failure of these programs as a failure of the legislature.

These progressives conveniently ignore the black market created by Maryland's high tobacco tax, particularly in Western Maryland and the Eastern Shore. The damage to Maryland's retailers as consumers increasingly purchase goods over the Internet, thereby avoiding the sales tax, is another unwelcome byproduct of their tax policy. And they ignore the impact on affordable housing for Maryland's working families of their advocating a new tax imposed on impervious surfaces, in the name of "protecting the bay."

In summary, there is a need to restore fiscal discipline to the budget that was lacking this year. The administration squandered an opportunity to get a head start on resolving the structural budget deficit without higher taxes. Resolving that problem without higher taxes can be accomplished - but will require the commitment of Governor O'Malley, House Speaker Michael E. Busch and Senate President Miller.

Sen. David Brinkley, a Republican who represents Frederick and Carroll counties, is minority leader of the Maryland Senate. His e-mail is david AT dbrinkley.com.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

20070427 Revisions to 2007-2008 Carroll County Public Schools Calendar

Revisions to 2007-2008 Carroll County Public Schools Calendar

April 27th, 2007

The Board of Education of Carroll County has approved the following revisions to the calendar for the 2007 - 2008 school year:

Schools and offices will be closed on February 12, 2008, for Presidential Primary Election Day. The date of the primary election, originally scheduled for March 4, was changed by the Maryland General Assembly. March 4 will be a regular school day.

The conference day scheduled for April 21, 2008, is changed to a regular school day for teachers and students. This modification increases the number of days built into the calendar for emergency closings to six.

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